How IPK Is Calculated in Indonesia
Indonesian universities calculate IPK (Indeks Prestasi Kumulatif) using the same credit-weighted formula as the US GPA. Each course earns a grade point value, and that value is multiplied by the course's SKS (Satuan Kredit Semester) credit weight. The sum of all those products is then divided by the total SKS completed.
The semester version of this calculation is called IP (Indeks Prestasi). Universities post IP at the end of each term and carry the cumulative IPK forward on every official result slip. A student who enters third year with 80 accumulated SKS at a 3.20 IPK needs a considerably higher IP in subsequent semesters to meaningfully shift that cumulative figure, because the denominator is already carrying the weight of two full years of coursework.
Indonesian University Grade Scale: Standard AB/BC Version
Most Indonesian state universities use an extended seven-grade scale that inserts AB and BC between the standard letter grades. This is the scale at Universitas Indonesia, Universitas Gadjah Mada, Institut Teknologi Bandung, and Institut Pertanian Bogor, among many others. The AB grade (3.50 points) recognises work that exceeds B without quite reaching A, rewarding genuine achievement rather than collapsing everything between 70 and 100 percent into a single grade band.
| Grade | Grade Points | Score Range | Description |
|---|---|---|---|
| A | 4.00 | 85-100% | Sangat Baik (Excellent) |
| AB | 3.50 | 75-84% | Between A and B |
| B | 3.00 | 70-74% | Baik (Good) |
| BC | 2.50 | 60-69% | Between B and C |
| C | 2.00 | 55-59% | Cukup (Satisfactory) |
| D | 1.00 | 40-54% | Kurang (Poor) |
| E | 0.00 | 0-39% | Tidak Lulus (Fail) |
The minimum passing grade for most required courses is C (2.00). Some universities treat D as a conditional pass for elective subjects, but any course with an E must be repeated regardless of whether it was core or elective. Individual faculties may set stricter pass thresholds for gateway subjects, particularly in engineering and medical programmes.
IP vs IPK: Semester GPA and How It Affects Credit Registration
IP and IPK serve different administrative functions in the Indonesian system. IP is the single-semester GPA, used primarily to determine how many SKS a student may register for in the following term. IPK is the running cumulative figure that governs graduation eligibility and predikat kelulusan.
The credit-load rule, set under DIKTI Regulation No. 3 of 2020, works as follows: a student with IP 3.00 or above may register for up to 24 SKS in the next semester. IP between 2.50 and 2.99 typically allows 20 to 22 SKS. IP below 2.00 drops the limit to 14 to 16 SKS, restricting the rate at which a struggling student can accumulate credits and effectively extending the time needed to complete the degree.
A student finishing their second semester at UI with a 2.70 IP would be limited to around 18 to 20 SKS in the third semester rather than the full 24. Over four years, these registration caps compound: consistently strong IP performance allows students to load up on credits and finish in the standard eight semesters, while repeated low-IP semesters often push the graduation timeline toward 10 or 12.
Predikat Kelulusan: Indonesian Graduation Honor Classifications
Indonesian universities award a predikat kelulusan on the final transcript and degree scroll based on the cumulative IPK at graduation. The classification is standardised across accredited institutions under Permendikbud No. 3 Tahun 2020, though individual universities may set stricter additional conditions through their academic regulations.
| Predikat | IPK Range | Additional Conditions |
|---|---|---|
| Dengan Pujian (Cumlaude) | 3.51 - 4.00 | No D or E grade ever attempted (even if retaken); completed degree within standard study period (typically 8-10 semesters for S1) |
| Sangat Memuaskan | 3.01 - 3.50 | None beyond IPK threshold |
| Memuaskan | 2.76 - 3.00 | None beyond IPK threshold |
| Lulus (Pass) | 2.00 - 2.75 | Minimum IPK to receive degree at graduation ceremony (yudisium) |
The no-D-or-E rule for Dengan Pujian applies to the original grade record, not just the final transcript. Even if a student retook a course and replaced a D with an A, the historical D appearance disqualifies them at most institutions. This is a common trap: students who earned a D in their first semester, then improved everything afterward, may finish with a 3.55 IPK and still find themselves classified as Sangat Memuaskan rather than Dengan Pujian.
Dengan Pujian graduates receive a special notation on their ijazah (degree certificate) and are recognised at the yudisium ceremony. Many competitive civil service recruitment programmes in Indonesia, along with postgraduate scholarships including LPDP (Lembaga Pengelola Dana Pendidikan), give preference to Dengan Pujian graduates or set a minimum IPK threshold of 3.25 to 3.50 for eligibility.
Students who are close to 3.51 at the end of their penultimate semester need to plan carefully. A student with 120 accumulated SKS and a 3.48 IPK entering their final semester needs a high IP across the remaining 24 SKS to cross the threshold. The calculator above can model this: enter your completed courses to see the current IPK, then adjust the grades on final-semester courses to project where you will land.
Worked Example: Engineering Student at ITB
A second-year student in the Faculty of Civil Engineering at ITB completes five courses in one semester totalling 17 SKS. The results are: Engineering Mathematics III (3 SKS, AB = 3.50), Fluid Mechanics (4 SKS, A = 4.00), Structural Analysis I (4 SKS, B = 3.00), Technical Drawing (3 SKS, A = 4.00), and Indonesian Language (3 SKS, BC = 2.50).
Quality points per course: 3 x 3.50 = 10.50, 4 x 4.00 = 16.00, 4 x 3.00 = 12.00, 3 x 4.00 = 12.00, 3 x 2.50 = 7.50. Total quality points: 58.00. Total SKS: 17. Semester IP = 58.00 / 17 = 3.41, which places this student in Sangat Memuaskan territory for the semester and allows registration of up to 24 SKS next term.
If this student enters Year 2 with 48 SKS already completed at a 3.25 running IPK, the updated cumulative IPK is (3.25 x 48 + 58.00) / 65 = (156.00 + 58.00) / 65 = 214.00 / 65 = 3.29. The strong semester pushed the IPK from 3.25 to 3.29. Reaching 3.51 for Dengan Pujian from 3.29, with 65 credits already locked in and around 80 more SKS to go, requires consistent A and AB performance for the rest of the programme.
Indonesian University Grading Practices Compared
All major Indonesian state universities use the DIKTI 4.00 maximum scale, but they differ on whether they include the AB and BC intermediate grades and how they set percentage thresholds. Private universities typically use a simpler scale.
| University | Abbreviation | Scale Type | AB/BC Grades | Location |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Universitas Indonesia | UI | Standard DIKTI | Yes | Depok / Jakarta |
| Institut Teknologi Bandung | ITB | Standard DIKTI | Yes | Bandung, West Java |
| Universitas Gadjah Mada | UGM | Standard DIKTI | Yes | Yogyakarta |
| Institut Pertanian Bogor | IPB | Standard DIKTI | Yes | Bogor, West Java |
| Institut Teknologi Sepuluh Nopember | ITS | Standard DIKTI | Yes | Surabaya, East Java |
| Universitas Airlangga | Unair | Standard DIKTI | Yes | Surabaya, East Java |
| Universitas Diponegoro | UNDIP | Standard DIKTI | Yes | Semarang, Central Java |
| BINUS University | BINUS | A-F (Private) | No | Jakarta / Bandung |
Private universities that operate under their own academic regulations, such as BINUS and Telkom University, typically assign grade points on a simpler A-to-F or A-to-E scale without the AB and BC steps. The grade point values they assign to each letter may also differ slightly from the DIKTI standard. Always check your own faculty's academic handbook if you are unsure which scale applies to your programme.
Converting Indonesian IPK to the US 4.0 GPA Scale
Because Indonesia's IPK system uses the same 4.00 ceiling as the US GPA, the numerical conversion is direct. An IPK of 3.65 equals a US GPA of 3.65. World Education Services (WES), the credential evaluation service most widely accepted by North American graduate programmes and immigration authorities for Indonesian transcripts, confirms this equivalence in its Indonesia country profile.
One area where applicants sometimes encounter questions is the A grade threshold. Most Indonesian universities award an A for scores of 80 to 85 percent and above, whereas many US universities set the A boundary at 90 to 93 percent. Competitive US graduate programmes, particularly in engineering and natural sciences, are generally familiar with this difference and do not apply an informal downward adjustment. If you are applying to a UK institution, Dengan Pujian with IPK 3.51 and above typically maps to a UK First Class Honours equivalent; Sangat Memuaskan (3.01 to 3.50) maps to a UK Upper Second (2:1).
Grade Replacement and the SP (Semester Pendek) Option
Most Indonesian state universities permit students to repeat courses in which they received a D or E grade. Under standard DIKTI policy, the improved grade replaces the original in the IPK calculation, though both entries remain visible on the official transcript. This is a meaningful difference from some other systems where failed grades remain in the GPA denominator permanently.
Many universities also run SP (Semester Pendek, or Short Semester) between the two main semesters. SP is a compressed accelerated term that lets students repeat failed courses or take electives to build their SKS count. SP courses appear on transcripts and count toward the IPK in the same way as regular semester courses. Because SP grades are included in the cumulative calculation, a student who earns an A in a repeated 3-SKS course during SP (replacing a prior D) adds 9.00 quality points while removing only 3.00, netting a meaningful IPK recovery.
One important caveat: while grade replacement helps the IPK number, the D grade permanently disqualifies the student from Dengan Pujian classification at most institutions. Any student aiming for Cumlaude must avoid D and E grades from the very first semester, since there is no pathway to retroactively erase a failing grade from the Cumlaude eligibility record.
BAN-PT Accreditation and IPK Recognition
The predikat kelulusan on an Indonesian degree certificate is only as meaningful as the accreditation status of the programme that issued it. BAN-PT (Badan Akreditasi Nasional Perguruan Tinggi) is the national accreditation body for Indonesian higher education. Programmes are rated on a scale: Unggul (Excellent, formerly A), Baik Sekali (Very Good, formerly B), Baik (Good, formerly C), and unaccredited.
Civil service positions at the national government level, LPDP scholarships, and many large state-owned enterprise (BUMN) recruitment programmes specify minimum BAN-PT programme accreditation levels alongside the IPK threshold. A Dengan Pujian graduate from an Unggul-accredited programme typically receives stronger institutional recognition than the same grade from an unaccredited programme, even though the IPK calculation itself is identical.
For international applications, WES and other credential evaluators assess the BAN-PT status of the awarding institution as part of their evaluation. An unaccredited programme may receive a reduced or conditional evaluation regardless of the student's IPK. Always verify your programme's current BAN-PT status at the official BAN-PT registry before making graduate school or employment decisions that depend on accreditation.
Sources and Verification
Grade point assignments, predikat kelulusan thresholds, and SKS registration limits on this page are sourced from DIKTI (Direktorat Jenderal Pendidikan Tinggi) standards, specifically Permendikbud No. 3 Tahun 2020 on National Standards for Higher Education, and cross-referenced against the published academic regulations of Universitas Indonesia and Universitas Gadjah Mada. International credential equivalence guidance is drawn from the World Education Services (WES) Indonesia country profile. Individual university scale variations (BINUS, Telkom) are sourced from those institutions' publicly available academic handbooks. Always verify current grading rules with your faculty's academic secretariat before making enrolment or application decisions that depend on these figures.
Last verified: May 2025